Mobility,Figures,And,Facts,The communication Mobility Figures And Facts
But when we talk about the handsets, undoubtedly, Nokia is the King of mobile phone market and LG stood at the third position. In this article we are concentrating on Nokia E5 from the house of Nokia and LG GM360 Viewty Snap by LG Mobile Com The Nokia Mobile Company is the undisputed leader in mobile world, they have latest technology and capability to deliver world class handsets at no extra costs. The N series, E series and C series phones have already rocked the world with th
Thefirst quarter of 2013 just ended, flooding the world with reams of data likequarterly results, sales numbers, growth ratios, share values and what not.Sifting through this data and trying to make sense of it is truly a dauntingtask. Thanks to the dedicated efforts of number-crunching organizations acrossthe world, we have a lot of interesting information to dwell upon. Furtherthanks to the enterprise mobile hub for collating some of the relevantfindings. So lets look at some numbers related to mobility, and see what sensewe can make of them: 1. Forty five percentemployers will have a hundred percent BYOD by twenty twenty Gartner recentlyconducted a worldwide survey of 2,053 CIOs and asked them about their Bringyour own device (BYOD) plans. The conclusion of the survey was that in the next7 years, the percentage of organizations where a 100 percent of the computedevices will be employee owned will go up from the existing 6 percent to fortyfive percent in 2020. It also found that by 2017, 50 % of the employers willhave some form of a BYOD in place. INTERPRETATION The rising uptake of BYO can be viewed in 2 ways. Firstly, it means thatemployees get a choice of technology, while the enterprises save money inpurchase and maintenance of the devices. Another way to look at this trend isthat the employees will be treated more as contractors who bring their owntools of trade rather than a bonafide, full time employees. They will be likethe carpenters or plumbers who carry their own tools. Whichever way you look atit, the trend is increasing. 2. Enterprises thinkbenefits of mobility outweigh the risks In a recent survey by Symantec aboutadoption of mobility and its risks, a whopping 70 percent respondents said thatwhile they understood the challenges and risks of mobility, they would stilladopt it because the benefits were far more. Also, in the same survey, 59percent people believed that employee owned devices should not get the sameaccess as the company provided. It was also found that 40 percent employees usepersonal devices for work irrespective of the corporate mobile policy. INTERPRETATION Enterprises are taking a positive view on mobility. This is a major changefrom the risk-averse businesses from just a few years ago. This fact willensure that the mega trend that is mobility will continue its forward momentuminto the next decade. Another important inference is that since theorganizations are aware of the risks, they would be more amenable to securitymanagement and MDM solution. 3. Tablet sales up byone hundred and seventeen percent As per strategy analytics, in the firstquarter of 2013, forty one point six million tablet were sold worldwide. In thesame period last year, the figure was eighteen point seven million. If IDC wereto be heard, they say the total tablets shipped in Q1 2013, was forty ninepoint two million, a one hundred and forty two percent growth over the sameperiod last year. The Q1 2013 numbers are actually more than the first sixmonths of 2012. INTERPRETATION Despite predictions to the contrary, tablets are an established and wellreceived form factor. Thats good news for all the developers targeting thelarger screens. You dont need to worry about your jobs. 4. 197 million of the405 mobile phones shipped in Q1 2013 were smartphones As per ABIresearch, Smartphone shipments surged by 38%, while those of feature phonesdeclined by 5.2%. This data is not filtered by age, or the figures for the 18 40 range would be much more skewed in favor of the smart devices. INTERPRETATION This is quite expected. People want their devices to be smarter and better.Mobility is definitely here to stay. Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE /* Style Definitions */ table.MsoNormalTable{mso-style-name:"Table Normal";mso-tstyle-rowband-size:0;mso-tstyle-colband-size:0;mso-style-noshow:yes;mso-style-priority:99;mso-style-qformat:yes;mso-style-parent:"";mso-padding-alt:0in 5.4pt 0in 5.4pt;mso-para-margin:0in;mso-para-margin-bottom:.0001pt;mso-pagination:widow-orphan;font-size:11.0pt;font-family:"Cambria","serif";mso-ascii-font-family:Cambria;mso-ascii-theme-font:minor-latin;mso-hansi-font-family:Cambria;mso-hansi-theme-font:minor-latin;}
Mobility,Figures,And,Facts,The